Trump believed parody set up by man impersonating his family for months

Supporter (21) created Twitter accounts claiming to be US president’s relatives

US president Donald Trump posted an article thanking his sister for supporting him online. It was prompted by an account set up by a 21-year-old from Pennsylvania. Photograph: Oliver Contreras/EPA
US president Donald Trump posted an article thanking his sister for supporting him online. It was prompted by an account set up by a 21-year-old from Pennsylvania. Photograph: Oliver Contreras/EPA

Last month, between tweets disputing his election loss, US president Donald Trump posted an article from a conservative website that said his sister Elizabeth Trump Grau had just joined Twitter to publicly back her brother's fight to overturn the vote.

"Thank you Elizabeth," Trump wrote on Twitter. "LOVE!" But the Twitter account that prompted the article was not his sister's. It was a fake profile run by Josh Hall, a 21-year-old food-delivery driver in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania. "I was like, 'Oh, my goodness. He actually thinks it's his sister,'" Hall, a fervent Trump supporter, said in an interview last week. It was a surreal coda to nearly a year of deception for Hall. Since February, he had posed as political figures and their families on Twitter, including five of the president's relatives. He had pretended to be Robert Trump, the president's brother; Barron Trump, the president's 14-year-old son; and Dr Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response co-ordinator. The accounts collectively amassed more than 160,000 followers.

Using their identities, he gained attention by mixing off-colour political commentary with wild conspiracy theories, including one that the government wanted to implant Americans with microchips, and another that John F Kennedy jnr, who died in a plane crash in 1999, was alive and about to replace Mike Pence as vice-president.

“There was no nefarious intention behind it,” Hall said. “I was just trying to rally up Maga supporters and have fun.” Many of those “Make America Great Again” followers appeared to believe the posts. Records also show that some accounts served another purpose: directing people to give Hall money. They promoted a fundraiser for a political group Hall created called “Gay Voices for Trump”. In an interview, he admitted that the group didn’t exist. The fundraiser brought in more than $7,300 (€6,000).

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An undated selfie provided by Josh Hall. The 21-year-old food-delivery driver in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania spent almost a year impersonating political figures and their families on Twitter. Photograph: Josh Hall via The New York Times
An undated selfie provided by Josh Hall. The 21-year-old food-delivery driver in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania spent almost a year impersonating political figures and their families on Twitter. Photograph: Josh Hall via The New York Times

Hall's Twitter spree seems to be a case of mischief spun out of control, illustrating how a person simply needs a phone and some knowledge of the internet to start trouble that gets the attention of hundreds of thousands of people. Hall was hardly the first self-professed Trump fan to try to profit off fellow Trump backers. Federal prosecutors, for example, said in August that Steve Bannon, Trump's former adviser, and three others had solicited donations to build a border wall and then pocketed more than $1 million.

And he was hardly the first person to create a fake online persona. Fake accounts have been instrumental in the spread of conspiracy theories, and scammers have repeatedly posed as celebrities, soldiers and even Mark Zuckerberg to defraud people on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Those companies said they remove millions of fake profiles each year. Yet Hall showed that it was still fairly simple to impersonate key White House officials and the president’s family, including his teenage son, and amass tens of thousands of followers before Twitter took notice.

Millions of people have been lured down dark internet rabbit holes such as QAnon, a pro-Trump conspiracy theory and is fuelled by someone posing as a government official. By comparison, Hall was a small-timer. His escapades in the alternate reality universe might have gone unnoticed – until Trump’s mistaken tweet elevated him to the big time of Maga misinformation.

The New York Times identified Hall as the person behind the fake Trump accounts, which have now all been taken down by Twitter, and constructed a recap of his deception via screenshots of some of his tweets and an archive of many others collected by Ian Kennedy and Melinda Haughey, University of Washington researchers who use software to save millions of tweets about the election and pandemic. The Times also interviewed Hall, people close to him and people he misled online.

Hall said he became interested in politics in 2016 when he was a teenager, energised by Trump. “I kind of thought he was like a clown at first,” he said. “But the more I heard him talk, I realised: Yeah, he says kind of off-the-wall things, but I do agree with what he’s saying.”

He dreamed of becoming a conservative talk-radio host, he said, so he opted against college and decided to instead build a persona online. He sparred with liberals on Twitter; created a "public figure" page on Facebook; and self-published a 49-page ebook on Amazon called Hall Nation that detailed his "38 essential rules to live life in order to be happy and successful." (The first rule? "Insults are a good thing.")

Offline, he was not so successful. He struggled to hold a job, he said, including stints as a hotel clerk and sandwich-maker. Most recently, he delivered food for DoorDash. But online, he started to develop a small following. In January, he asked followers to help him pay for a lawyer, saying “a Planned Parenthood loving radical leftist” whom he used to date had accused him of harassment. He also began selling T-shirts that said “Josh Hall did nothing wrong”. He raised $815 on GoFundMe. Court documents indicate he is using a public defender. A hearing in the case is scheduled for later this month.

Hall said that around that time Twitter suspended his account without explanation. “Once I got banned from Twitter, my attitude was kind of like, ‘What the hell, I’m just going to have fun now,’” he said. (A Twitter spokesman said the company suspended his original account because he had created multiple accounts under different identities.)

So he started a new account under a different name: Rod Blagojevich, the former Democratic governor of Illinois best known for trying to sell a US Senate seat. Blagojevich's prison sentence had just been commuted by Trump, making him a sudden ally in the eyes of some conservatives.

Twitter eventually removed the @GovBlago account, prompting Hall to impersonate someone else in the headlines: Birx, the White House official working on the pandemic. “The media is lying to you about this virus,” he wrote as @DoctorBirx on April 22nd. The pandemic was “plotted by the powers that be to crash our economy in hopes that Trump will pay for it in November”.

The account didn’t gain much traction, so he moved on to a brand that was sure to attract more eyeballs: The Trump family. Hall said he went on Wikipedia to find Trump relatives who didn’t yet have Twitter accounts, and first landed on Robert Trump, the president’s brother.

As @BigRobTrump, he quickly gained more than 25,000 followers, partly by spreading conspiracy theories. "The coronavirus was planned and released onto the world by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, " Hall said as Robert Trump. It was unclear if Hall believed such lies or if he thought they were just good at attracting attention, but they had become almost banalities in the conspiracy-filled corners of the internet where he spent much of his time.

When Twitter removed the first Robert Trump account, Hall started a new one, this time under the username @UncleRobTrump. It did even better, ultimately collecting more than 77,000 followers from July to August. As the new Robert Trump account gained influence, Hall began using it to promote his own Twitter profile, @TheBiTrumpGuy. On that account, Hall, who said he was bisexual, called himself the founder of a group called Gay Voices for Trump. Hall used the fake Robert Trump profile to promote the group. “Uncle Rob runs Gay Voices For Trump with @TheBiTrumpGuy, although I am very much a heterosexual male. It’s the Trump genes – we love women,” Hall wrote as Robert Trump in July. “But we are trying to reach out to LGBT and other minority voters. Josh is doing great work so please give him a follow and support him!” The tweets brought Hall’s real profile thousands of new followers.

Not long after, Hall started messaging Trump supporters as Robert Trump, asking them to donate to a fundraiser for his group, according to screenshots posted online by two people who received the messages. “Hey patriot. Would really appreciate if you have a couple of bucks to spare to organisation,” he wrote, according to one screenshot. Hall denied he sent such messages and suggested that the screenshots had been fabricated. “I would tell you if I did,” he said. “I should have used better judgment and stuff. But I didn’t deliberately try and dupe people out of money.” His fundraiser on the website GoFundMe called his group “a grassroots coalition of LGBT Americans” and said all donations would go to “field organising, events and merchandise”. He brought in $7,384. Hall admitted last week that the group didn’t exist. He didn’t do more than register about 100 people to vote. “I didn’t end up ever really doing anything with the Gay Voices for Trump,” he said. “So I never got the funds from it.” He said the money was still with GoFundMe.

A GoFundMe spokeswoman said that the organiser behind the fundraiser – an account named Josh H – had withdrawn the money. She said GoFundMe was now investigating how the funds were used and that the company would give refunds to any donors who requested one.

Hall didn’t respond to follow-up questions about the fundraiser.

In August, Robert Trump died. The news drew scrutiny to the fake Robert Trump account, and some of its followers began to suspect that Hall was behind it, given the pattern of tweets between the profiles. In response, Hall said on Twitter that the fake account was run by “a close political friend of mine” who “did not know about Mr Trump’s serious condition.”

I'm a big Trump supporter, but I'm thinking, 'He's got to know that that's a parody,'... How does he not know?

He began impersonating different Trump relatives, including Fred Trump III, the president's nephew; Maryanne Trump Barry, the president's sister and a federal judge; and Barron Trump, the president's teenage son. "COVID is a scam," he wrote on August 23rd as Barron Trump, a fake account that attracted more than 34,000 followers in eight days. On August 25th, the account posted: "Q is real. The more the media delegitimizes it, the more it shows that they're scared."

The Trump Organization, which has spoken on behalf of the Trump family members in the past, did not respond to requests for comment. The White House declined to comment. The Twitter spokesman said the company eventually took down all of Hall's accounts for violating its rules on impersonation and evading a previous ban from the site. In response to questions about why someone could create accounts impersonating the president's teenage son and a White House official, the spokesman said in an email, "We're committed to protecting the integrity of the conversation on Twitter, and we're working hard to ensure that violations of our rules against impersonation, particularly when people are attempting to spread misinformation, are addressed quickly and consistently."

A review on Saturday showed nearly 100 fake Barron Trump accounts were still active on Twitter, not counting those that identified as parodies. Without a Twitter account, Hall felt left out after the election, as many fellow Trump supporters convened on Twitter to claim that the vote was rigged. “Why not make a comeback?” he recalled thinking. “I’m going to do something to spice things up.”

On the afternoon of Wednesday, November 18th, he created a new impostor, this time posing as the father of Kamala Harris, the vice-president-elect. "My daughter is not who she portrays herself to be. She is dangerous for our democracy," he posted.

The tweet got little attention, so he abandoned that fake for another Trump sibling. The final living sibling he hadn’t tried was Elizabeth Trump Grau, the president’s older sister, who is in her late 70s, lives in Florida and has hardly said anything public since her brother was elected.

Hall changed the name, photos and bio of the Harris account and erased the old posts. Then he started with a new message: “This election inspired me to break my silence,” he wrote under a photo of Trump Grau and the username @TheBettyTrump. “My brother Don won this election.”

He went viral again, collecting about 20,000 followers in 24 hours. Hall delighted many of his followers with dozens more juvenile and bizarre tweets, including claims that president-elect Joe Biden is a pathological liar, Harris is a communist and Michelle Obama is a man.

On November 20th, Hall said, he woke up and checked the president’s Twitter account, as he did most mornings. “I was like shellshocked,” he said. He quickly began bragging on Snapchat that Donald Trump had tweeted about his fake account. “My friend was joking, ‘Maybe he’s not close with his sister, and you just brought him and his sister a lot closer,’” he said. “So I kind of felt good about that.”

Within hours, the account was outed as a fake. Hall argued that his accounts were clear parodies, if anyone just looked at what they posted. As Trump Grau, for instance, he called the CNN anchor Anderson Cooper "Anderson Pooper" and said he would cover the legal fees of anyone who poured gravy down the pants of Chris Wallace, the Fox News anchor.

“I’m a big Trump supporter, but I’m thinking, ‘He’s got to know that that’s a parody,’” he said. “How does he not know?” – New York Times